86th Wisconsin Legislature | |||||||||||||
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Overview | |||||||||||||
Legislative body | Wisconsin Legislature | ||||||||||||
Meeting place | Wisconsin State Capitol | ||||||||||||
Term | January 3, 1983 – January 7, 1985 | ||||||||||||
Election | November 2, 1982 | ||||||||||||
Senate | |||||||||||||
Members | 33 | ||||||||||||
Senate President | Fred Risser (D) | ||||||||||||
President pro tempore | William A. Bablitch (D) until July 31, 1983 | ||||||||||||
Party control | Democratic | ||||||||||||
Assembly | |||||||||||||
Members | 99 | ||||||||||||
Assembly Speaker | Thomas A. Loftus (D) | ||||||||||||
Speaker pro tempore | David Clarenbach (D) | ||||||||||||
Party control | Democratic | ||||||||||||
Sessions | |||||||||||||
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Special sessions | |||||||||||||
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The Eighty-Sixth Wisconsin Legislature convened from January 3, 1983, to January 7, 1985, in regular session, and also convened in six special sessions.[1]
This was the only legislative session under the legislative redistricting plan imposed by a panel of federal judges in 1982 in the case Wisconsin State AFL-CIO v. Elections Board.[2] The district plan was intended to be punitive, scrambling the district numbers and putting incumbents in head-to-head contests. During this session, the legislature and governor agreed on a new redistricting plan to supersede the court plan, the only time this has been done in Wisconsin history.
Senators representing odd-numbered districts were newly elected for this session and were serving the first two years of a four-year term. Assembly members were elected to a two-year term. Assembly members and odd-numbered senators were elected in the general election of November 2, 1982. Senators representing even-numbered districts were serving the third and fourth year of a four-year term, having been elected in the general election of November 4, 1980.[1]